I Speak of the City: David Hernandez

Magnolia Memories Chicagofrom preface: notes from magnolia street

I grew up here.
I know the streets like the back of a passenger’s head on the subway train. I have tasted the freshly-killed animal anger that periodically implodes upon seeing a street survivor sleeping in a hallway under a newspaper blanket headlining the upside of the economy. Maybe it’s the memory of mami y papi struggling to pry their children loose from a one and a half room, immigrant-furnished apartment that makes me empathize with all the little great people forever reminding me where I came from. Therefore, it’s my natural choice to write their story from the most intimate poem to a class-action song of universal celebration.

© David Hernandez from Rooftop Piper

Bob Holman blogs at "On the Griot Trail"


Bob Holman
Originally uploaded by kutibeng

I’ve never met anyone more excited about the possibility of poetry than Bob Holman. Mention any idea involving poetics with Bob and he will jump all over it, encourage you, give you a dozen resources, reminisce on variations of the idea, and then keep repeating the idea over and over transforming the idea of poetics into an actual poem right on the spot.

Bob is also one of those rare poets who can not be solely identified as a page or stage poem since Bob does not read or performs poems, he embodies them. The poem, whether his own or a cover poem, seems to come from his whole body with a seamless stream of word choice, sound play, and mnemonic gestures coming to the listener at the speed of poetry (we see the page/word/poet/stage before we process the text/word/sound/atmosphere but respond to both as if one).

His love for the potential and kinetic energy of poetry spreads across every genre as Bob has championed slam, hip-hop, experimental, TV, internet, and conceptual poetry—to name a few—long before they became accepted by the majority of the poetry gatekeepers. Example: Before Def Jam became synonymous with poets on TV, Bob was producing The United States of Poetry, a series that wasn’t just content with putting popular poets on a stage but finding a diverse range of language poets who embodied different poetic traditions from all across the States and presenting them in dynamic audio/visual settings that pushed the poetics a step further.

Currently, Bob is in Africa with Griot Papa Susso following through on the Bowery Arts and Science’s mission of “seeking to preserve and enhance the oral tradition of poetry via live readings, media documentation and creation, and to restore poetry to the center of our culture, as it is in oral cultures.” Blog reports on their quest to find and document some of the richest oral traditions on the planet can be found at www.griottrail.com.

GRITtv with Laura Flanders: The Future of Language—An Interview with Bob Holman

There are more and more languages disappearing every day and by the end of the century it is possible that half of all existing languages will have vanished. Bob Holman of the Bowery Poetry Club, an anchor for local arts in New York City, says that it is the great tragedy of our time. There are laws to protect plants and animals, why not languages? But Holman isn’t sitting back. He is cultivating poetry, writing poetry, and making documentaries about poets. Most recently a project that re-traces Allen Ginsberg’s trip to India and a documentary film on the griot’s of west Africa. You can learn more about Holman and the Bowery Poetry Club at their site. You can also find Holman’s United States of Poetry, a mult-disk DVD compendium of American Poetry, right here.

Power to the people, no delay


Obama
Originally uploaded by Austin Kleon

Many thanks to Poet Laureate of the Blogosphere Tony Brown, poet Reginald Harris, poeta Manuel Paul Lopez, and GotPoetry.com for adding their voices to the call for Patricia Smith as Inaugural Poet.

Make your voice heard and chime in for Patricia or whichever poet you think would best set the tone for the Obama administration.

Mas noticia y un comentario sobre Marcello Lucero

Ahora entiendo porque Steve Levy estaba criando una distancia contra la asignación de Marcello Lucero y la expresión racista contra inmigrantes en Long Island. Se parece que Levy ha defendió la percepción que nuevo inmigrantes son la causa de todo los problemas en el EEUU.

No me sorprende que este tipo de racismo existe in la área de Nueva York. En todos mi años en NY yo solo me sentí seguro como Ecuatoriano cuando estaba en la compañía de otros raíces de color. Afuera de esos instantes, siempre he sentido que mi etnicidad ha sido una curiosidad (¿Eres Boricua? ¿Eres Cubano?) o abajo ataque (¿De verdad que eres Latino?). Y eso es con la ventaja que conoce el ingles, que tengo apoyo de mi familia y comunidad, soy educado en ingles, y que he vivido en los EEUU casi todo mi vida. Con todo eso, nunca sentí completamente seguro.

Steve Levy, en sus comentarios del pasado, nunca ayudo los residentes hispano de Suffolk sentir seguro. Y ahora ese ambiente peligroso, ha resultado en la tragedia de Marcello Lucero. La noticia dice que Joselo Lucero, el hermano de Marcello, ha pedido que Levy no asiste las vigilias para su hermano. Bien hecho. Ahora, la comunidad tiene que seguir el ejemplo de Joselo y comenzar reportando los crímenes de racismo para que Levy puede ver la realidad y consecuencia de sus acciones.

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In Wake of Hate Crime, Suffolk County Exec Backtracks on Remarks

After an Ecuadorean immigrant was stabbed to death, apparently by a group of teens looking to “f— up” Hispanics, in Patchogue, Suffolk County Executive Steve Levy denounced the crime but later claimed it was a “one-day story,” suggesting it was getting media attention because of his immigration policies.

Now Levy tells Newsday, “It was absolutely the wrong time for me to suggest that coverage of events in Suffolk is treated differently by the media. The horrible incident is indeed more than a one-day story. It was a reminder of how far we as a society still have to go.”

About Levy’s immigration policies: The NY Times has an editorial about Levy, “Local lawmakers often complain about immigration, but Mr. Levy went much farther than most. He founded a national organization to lobby for crackdowns… He tried to deputize county police to make immigration arrests and to rid the county work force of employees without papers. He sought to drive day laborers from local streets, yet rigidly opposed efforts to create hiring sites… He denounces racist hatred, yet his words have made him a hero in pockets of Long Island where veins of racism run deep.”

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CNN Commentary: No time for hate

When tragedy strikes, there are always those who look for someone to blame. In Suffolk County, local activists are blaming public officials who have crusaded against illegal immigration to score political points with their constituents.

The anti-immigrant atmosphere was something even the presidential candidates talked about. Earlier this year, Barack Obama pointed to comments by radio and television hosts critical of immigration. “A certain segment has basically been feeding a kind of xenophobia,” he told supporters at a Palm Beach, Florida, fundraiser, tying that sentiment to an increase in hate crimes against Hispanics.

In an interview just before the election, Sen. John McCain told me that there have always been those who stoke fears that American culture and the English language are on their way out.

Meanwhile, Lucero’s mother still can’t believe what happened to her son — or why it happened. She told a reporter that she doesn’t understand the hate. “We are human beings,” she said. Some people seem to have forgotten that fact.

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New York Times Editorial: The High Cost of Harsh Words

Words have consequences. Steve Levy, the Suffolk County executive, is learning that the hard way during a horrible week. Seven teenagers were arrested and charged in the fatal stabbing last Saturday of Marcello Lucero, an Ecuadorean immigrant, on a street in the Long Island village of Patchogue.

The apparent lynching caused shock and anger across the country. Politicians, religious leaders and villagers gathered Wednesday in Patchogue to console the victim’s relatives and to condemn racial hatred. Mr. Lucero’s brother, Joselo, spoke movingly in English and Spanish of how strangers’ words of support had made him feel like part of a larger family.

Mr. Levy was not there. He later called Joselo Lucero, who asked him to please stay away from public remembrances.

Mr. Levy’s past harsh words and actions against undocumented workers have now left him cornered with a tragically limited ability to lead the county in confronting a brutal act that surely pains him as much as anyone.

Local lawmakers often complain about immigration, but Mr. Levy went much farther than most. He founded a national organization to lobby for crackdowns. He went on “Lou Dobbs.” He tried to deputize county police to make immigration arrests and to rid the county work force of employees without papers. He sought to drive day laborers from local streets, yet rigidly opposed efforts to create hiring sites. Even as tensions simmered in places like Farmingville, a hot spot for anti-immigrant resentment, Mr. Levy would not budge.

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1,000 jam Patchogue street to honor slain immigrant

Holding candles and waving signs proclaiming “we are all immigrants,” more than 1,000 people jammed a Patchogue street Friday night to honor an Ecuadorean man killed there six days earlier.

As speakers decried the stabbing of Marcelo Lucero, 38, many in the crowd talked about what they called entrenched racism on Long Island – especially Suffolk.

Wearing buttons with Marcelo’s name, immigrants from Central and South America who are usually in the shadows poured onto Railroad Avenue to hug each other and let loose frustration and anger. The immigrants said Long Islanders are eager for low-wage landscapers and dishwashers but complain about the cost of services for them.

The crowd also included whites and ranged from babies to grandparents, standing shoulder to shoulder and chanting “no more hate.”

Don’t believe the hype – its a sequel

[it’s incredible to think that after this election–where president-elect obama was at various points accused of plagiarism, derided for being over eloquent, and praised for his rhetoric–the power of speech is being minimized by suffolk county executive steve levy. levy doesn’t see the connection between anti-immigrant opinion and the death of marcello lucero even as long island doorsteps are being littered with kkk flyers in an area where residents draw “sharp distinctions between assimilated immigrants, who they said should be welcomed as friends and neighbors, and newly arrived illegal immigrants, who they said do not belong.”

the rhetoric gets deeper as ecuadorian officials want stiffer charges to be brought forward in the attack and others feel that hate crime charges shouldn’t be inflated “even if you choose racism.”

all this speechifying can take a back seat as marcello lucero’s mother has the ultimate say:

“The pain is so great, there aren’t words to describe what I feel,” Rosario Lucero said in Spanish yesterday by telephone from her home in Gualaceo on the death of the second of her four children.]